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Picture of Health: Prostate cancer

In Health

12:24 am on Mon, 05.20.13

Dr. Graham Colditz, a director at the Siteman Cancer Center and professor at Washington University, looks at data from the St. Louis Regional Health Commission's Decade Review of Health Status about the change in prostate cancer over the past 10 years. Previously: Colorectal cancer and breast cancer

Picture of Health: Breast cancer

In Health

6:35 am on Wed, 05.15.13

Dr. Graham Colditz, a director at the Siteman Cancer Center and professor at Washington University looks at data from the St. Louis Regional Health Commission's Decade Review of Health Status about the change in breast cancer over the past 10 years. Next: Prostate cancer

Picture of health: Colorectal cancer

In Health

6:40 am on Tue, 05.14.13

Dr. Graham Colditz, a director at the Siteman Cancer Center and professor at Washington University looks at data from the St. Louis Regional Health Commission's Decade Review of Health Status about the change in colorectal cancer over the past 10 years. Next: Breast cancer and prostate cancer.

Picture of Health: Prevalence of diabetes

In Health

6:22 am on Fri, 03.22.13

Eric S. Armbrecht, assistant professor at St. Louis University's Center for Outcomes Research talks about the prevalence of diabetes. There are about 114,000 people in St. Louis and St. Louis County diagnosed with diabetes and perhaps another 30,000 undiagnosed.

Picture of Health: Families in poverty

In Health

7:08 am on Mon, 03.18.13

In a graphic and audio series on health in St. Louis, Dr. Dolores J. Gunn, director of the St. Louis County Department of Health, talks about poverty and its effects on health. Between 2000 and 2010, the number of families in poverty fell in St. Louis but rose in St. Louis County.

Drought forces the hand of cattle farmers facing sell-off

In Region

7:18 am on Wed, 08.01.12

The cows are the picture of health. Surrounding them, trees are shedding leaves and the pasture underfoot is crisp and cracked, long-since gone dormant in the inhospitable heat and drought so widespread this summer. Far too early, cattle farmers are buying feed. (Second of two parts)

Green roofs, chickens and city kitties

In Region

8:22 am on Fri, 06.22.12

The Sustainable Backyard Tour returns on June 24 for its second year. The tour has grown to include 54 sustainable outdoor spaces that visitors can see between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Sunday.

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Conference of American nuns will mull response to Vatican charges

In Nation

7:55 am on Fri, 08.03.12

Meeting in St. Louis next week, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious will have its first opportunity as an assembled group to consider what to do after the Vatican issued a mandate for change this spring. It calls on the conference to reorganize and more strictly observe church teachings.

The 'free' Zoo

In Commentary

7:51 am on Tue, 05.22.12

When a family of four goes to the St. Louis Zoo, they can be forgiven for not knowing it will cost them $60, $72 if they park. If they can't pay, the alternative is to tell the kids they can't do what kids do at the zoo.

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Justin Leszcz and Yellow Tree Farm

In This is St. Louis

6:13 am on Wed, 05.22.13

Justin Leszcz started getting into the world of farming by foraging and tending a very small urban farm. He now sells miscellaneous product to various restaurants in town and can be seen at farmers' markets selling his popcorn and corn meal.

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Save that dirt, Howard Buffett says

In Science

11:09 am on Wed, 05.15.13

Speaking to reporters at Monsanto, Howard Buffett warned that future generations would foot the bill for irresponsible soil use. He urged leaders to address thorny issues such as malnutrition and environmental destruction.

Arch Grants winners set for debut

In InnovationSTL

11:32 am on Tue, 05.14.13

Twenty winners will split a million dollars and a wide array of professional services after this year's Arch Grants competition. Victors will also see one-on-one business mentoring in their prize package. The diverse group includes everything from biotech concerns to fashion enterprises.

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Innovation and entrepreneurial activity are on the rise in St. Louis, especially in bioscience, technology and alternative energy. The Beacon's InnovationSTL section focuses on the people who are part of this wave, what they're doing and how this is shaping our future. To many St. Louisans, this wave is not yet visible. InnovationSTL aims to change that. We welcome you to share your knowledge, learn more about this vibrant trend and discuss its impact.

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Save that dirt, Howard Buffett says

In Science

11:09 am on Wed, 05.15.13

Speaking to reporters at Monsanto, Howard Buffett warned that future generations would foot the bill for irresponsible soil use. He urged leaders to address thorny issues such as malnutrition and environmental destruction.

Supreme Court rules unanimously for Monsanto in Roundup case

In Law Scoop

10:42 pm on Mon, 05.13.13

Vernon Bowman's challenge to Monsanto Co.'s patent on its Roundup Ready soybean seeds was billed as a David vs. Goliath contest. Goliath won and won big. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that an Indiana soybean farmer had violated Monsanto's patent on its genetically engineered soybean seeds.

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The lambs of sacrifice in chess

In On Chess

6:13 am on Wed, 05.22.13

Last week, Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura sacrificed his crown as the King of America. He faced an individual decision to play against the best in the nation or the best on the planet. Find out what happened at that world-level tournament.

Letting perfect stand in the way of the good

In Commentary

6:12 am on Wed, 05.22.13

Our world sees rapid change in many ways -- how we view women, races, sexual minorities and other populations, for instance. While a daily delivery of new and different can be exhausting, it can force us to reflect and consider how to move forward, often incrementally, toward what is good and what bring value to our lives.

College costs - easy to attack, hard to solve

In Commentary

6:12 am on Tue, 05.21.13

Paying professors less, increasing online courses and raising class size might make the bill cheaper, but the value of the degree will be less, as well. It's not that there are no solutions, but the easy ones create their own problems.

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Donna Korando is the Beacon's Voices editor. You can contact her and submit opinion pieces for possible publication at dkorando@stlbeacon.org.

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